From MIT Dropout to Billionaire: How Alexander Wang Built Scale AI


When Alexander Wang founded Scale AI in 2016, the AI landscape was still in its early stages. The data labelling startup, driven by Wang’s vision, quickly became a key player in the AI landscape, growing to over 1,500 employees and securing crucial partnerships across industries and governments.
Now, with Meta’s $14.3 billion investment in Scale AI for a 49% stake, and Wang’s shift to Meta’s SuperIntelligence Lab, the journey of this 28-year-old billionaire is nothing short of remarkable.
This transition was confirmed through a company statement. While Wang has stepped down from his role at Scale AI, he will continue to maintain a position on the company’s board of directors.
But, Who Exactly is Alexander Wang?
Wang founded Scale AI at 16 after dropping out from MIT.
In a parting note to his employees, Wang highlighted that this was a period when AI started gaining traction—DeepMind had just launched AlphaGo, and Google had rolled out TensorFlow. Yet, the industry was still in its early stages.
Scale AI provides data labelling and model evaluation for AI training and serves clients such as Meta, OpenAI, Microsoft, and the US defence department.
He began his entrepreneurial journey at San Francisco’s renowned startup accelerator, Y Combinator, in the Summer 2016 batch, along with his co-founder Lucy Guo.
Reflecting on the early days of building Scale AI, Wang, in a podcast hosted by South Park Commons, said, “The first half of our batch…was probably…[what] we refer to as a squiggle—a lot of existential angst; you don’t really know what you’re doing with your life.”
However, despite the uncertainty, he believes it all came together. “Ultimately, we built Scale…It was like a perfect storm; a lot of serendipity,” he said. Wang explained that the core idea was simple: in the future, human computation would be orchestrated much more dynamically, but the necessary API was still lacking.
Scale AI is just one of the many AI startups born out of Y Combinator. His time at YC and, eventually, Silicon Valley, led to him making powerful connections in the tech and venture capital ecosystem.
What’s in it for Meta?
This acqui-hire strengthens Meta’s position in the AGI race, in addition to its previous significant acquisitions in social media, like Instagram and WhatsApp, and VR, such as Oculus.
“Wang is joining Meta to work on Meta’s AI efforts. He will continue to serve as a director on the Scale board of directors and support the company’s ongoing work to unlock the power of AI and keep human values at the forefront,” the company said in a statement.
Meanwhile, the company announced Jason Droege, who has extensive experience at Uber Eats and AXON, as the new interim CEO.
When The Information first broke the news about this deal, an investor highlighted the advantages this structure provides for Meta. “It’s a very interesting structure, where Meta effectively gains control of Scale AI, bypasses antitrust review, and acquires top talent, including Alexander Wang, all while paying only half of the cash needed to buy the entire company,” he wrote.
Notably, Axios previously reported that Meta is restructuring its AI operations.
Through this, the company is creating two teams—AI Products, led by Connor Hayes, which focuses on tools like Meta AI assistant; and AGI Foundations, co-headed by Ahmad Al-Dahle and Amir Frenkel, which works on foundational technologies like Llama models. A subgroup from Facebook Artificial Intelligence Research (FAIR) will join the AGI team. As per reports, even though no job cuts are planned, leadership changes are to be expected.
Big tech companies are partnering with the top players in the field to ensure they can harness these technologies to their advantage. Historically, Microsoft’s $13 billion investment in OpenAI, Amazon’s $8 billion stake in Anthropic, and Google’s backing of Anthropic have effectively secured much of the top-tier model infrastructure within their tightly integrated ecosystems.
In addition, Meta’s partnership with Scale AI, which has ties to the US government, improves its institutional credibility and supports initiatives like the Defense Llama project—a version of Meta’s model for national security applications.
The data collection and labelling market is growing rapidly and is expected to reach $29.2 billion by 2032, driven by the increasing demand for high-quality labelled data for AI and machine learning. Scale AI is one of the major players in the market. It already works with tech giants like Microsoft and OpenAI.
As per reports, the company was recently valued at approximately $14 billion in a 2024 funding round supported by Meta and Microsoft. Moreover, it was reportedly in discussions earlier this year for a tender offer that would value it at $25 billion.
Unlike its competitors, Meta does not offer cloud computing services, making the investment in Scale AI essential for improving its AI capabilities and access to quality labelled data.
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